Goodhill Geoffrey J, Xu Jun
Queensland Brain Institute, Department of Mathematics, and Institute for Molecular Bioscience, University of Queensland, St. Lucia, Australia.
Network. 2005 Mar;16(1):5-34. doi: 10.1080/09548980500254654.
Information about the world is often represented in the brain in the form of topographic maps. A paradigm example is the topographic representation of the visual world in the optic tectum/superior colliculus. This map initially forms during neural development using activity-independent molecular cues, most notably some type of chemospecific matching between molecular gradients in the retina and corresponding gradients in the tectum/superior colliculus. Exactly how this process might work has been studied both experimentally and theoretically for several decades. This review discusses the experimental data briefly, and then in more detail the theoretical models proposed. The principal conclusions are that (1) theoretical models have helped clarify several important ideas in the field, (2) earlier models were often more sophisticated than more recent models, and (3) substantial revisions to current modelling approaches are probably required to account for more than isolated subsets of the experimental data.
关于世界的信息在大脑中常以地形图的形式呈现。一个典型的例子是视觉世界在视顶盖/上丘的地形图表示。这张地图最初在神经发育过程中利用与活动无关的分子线索形成,最显著的是视网膜中的分子梯度与顶盖/上丘中的相应梯度之间某种类型的化学特异性匹配。几十年来,人们从实验和理论两方面对这个过程的具体运作方式进行了研究。本综述简要讨论了实验数据,然后更详细地讨论了所提出的理论模型。主要结论是:(1)理论模型有助于阐明该领域的几个重要观点;(2)早期模型往往比近期模型更复杂;(3)可能需要对当前的建模方法进行重大修订,以便解释实验数据中不止孤立的子集。